Plato, Marx, And Critical Thought
David Richter's book is absolutely indispensable, as it is one of the few anthologies willing to acknowledge the existence of and include well-chosen examples from the long history of critical thought and how it helps us understand what we read, why we read, and what we value.
The greatest strength of Richter's work is that it simply starts at the beginning of classical literature and moves forward until about the mid-19th century, charting a course through what is aptly termed "the critical tradition." This movement provides a broad context in which one can more usefully engage contemporary thinkers. Present-day debates over representation, for example, and the dangers thereof, weigh a great deal more when one is familiar with the long history that underpins this debate, from Aristotle to Horace, Plato to Marx
The critical tradition in Richter is shaped in such a way to choose the contemporary essays well. They're selected and organized in such a way as to give a sense of a debate taking shape. This not only helps the readings speak to each other more directly, but it also forces the reader to keep in mind that the critical tradition is never a finished product. This paper will examine the ideas of Plato as defined in the "Republic," and compare them to Marx's "Communist Manifesto." These two men's ideas regarding the nature of society and the ideal structure for society arise from their ideas of the nature of man. If man is a moral creature, who has a natural bent toward the greater good of his fellow citizens, and society in general, then either of these two philosophers could have penned the outline for a perfect society. However, in a final analysis, this paper will propose its own ideas of the nature of man. If the finally proposal is accurate, the flaws of both Plato and Marx will be glaringly apparent. In doing so, this paper will propose reasons behind the failure of both writer's philosophies.
Plato's republic attacks the mimetic arts. He believed that these arts were only copies the natural realities around them, and therefore did not contribute to the betterment of man. Plato's belief was that art is fundamentally based on imitation. It was this imitation factor which made art inferior, combined with the unsuitable moral content of some art. Plato's condemnation of art is seen by some as too rationalist, and in striving for a pure idealism Plato was depriving art of its charms, and value to simple improve life because of its pleasantness, and beauty. Modern objections to Plato's theory of art assert that he failed to discover the specific nature of artist creation. In the creation of art, the process of imitation is necessary: creating a new reality from an artist's own imagination. Did Plato really intended imitation to mean a slavish copy, or is there intrinsic value in the process of imagining a world that is better than the one which we possess?
In Plato's rush to judgment on the mimetic arts, he seems to have rolled through an important stop sign. Didn't Plato himself participate in the very art he condemns? Plato's writings, in particular the Republic, are his copy of the ideal society, put to pen and ink. His ideal did not exist, nor were all his theories practical. He contributed to the theories behind which the common man could become a more ideal man. But this idealic vision of reality did not exist. This approach to literature is identical to the sculptor's approach to his clay, as he seeks to sculpt the perfect human bust. His purpose in describing the perfect society in which men and women worked with pure motives to create the perfect functional society was no different than the stage actor's goal to capture the perfect passion, or emotion as they portrayed life as they saw it.
On poetic inspiration, Plato says in the "Ion": "God takes away the mind of these men and uses them as his ministers...in order that we who hear them may know that it is not they who utter these words of great price when they are out of their wits, but that it is God himself who speaks and addresses us through them." Plato's presupposition is that as a man seeks the higher ideal which abide deep within a man, he will move from the self seeking vulgar realities of life to a "higher plain" of consciousness, one which only seeks the good of self, others, and society in general. Thus, the man would begin to speak with the mind...
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